ABSTRACT

How do people understand science? How do they feel about science, how do they relate to it, what do they hope from it and what do they fear about it? Science of the People: Understanding and using science in everyday contexts helps answer these questions as the result of painstaking interviewing by Professor Joan Solomon of all and sundry in a fairly typical small town. The result is a unique overview of how a very wide range of adults, united only by local geography, relate to science. Many of the findings run contrary to what is widely believed about how science is learnt and about how people view it. Chapters include:

  • An Approach to Awareness
  • Publics for Science?
  • Ethics and Action
  • Interpretation and Change

Joan Solomon, who sadly died before this book could be published, enjoyed an international reputation in science education. After a long career teaching science in secondary schools she moved into the university sector and ending up holding chairs of science education at the Open University, King’s College London and the University of Plymouth. She was a world leader in her subject and inspired classroom teachers and wrote a number of very influential papers with some of them. She produced many important books, booklets and other resources to help science teachers and science educators get to grips with the history and philosophy of science and the teaching of energy, amongst other topics.

 

This book is essential reading for those involved in Science education and educational policy.

chapter 1|16 pages

An approach to awareness

chapter 2|17 pages

Publics for science?

chapter 3|16 pages

Scientific literacy

chapter 4|18 pages

About questions and answers

chapter 5|19 pages

‘What are your interests in science?'

chapter 6|19 pages

How the groups link up

chapter 7|18 pages

Talking, talking

chapter 8|19 pages

Outrageous fortune

chapter 9|17 pages

Ethics and action

chapter 10|16 pages

Risk and trust

chapter 11|19 pages

Interpretation and change